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OpenLearning raises $8.5 million from Malaysian investors, following growth spurt in the country

Social-learning startup OpenLearning has raised $8.5 million in Series A funding, led by Malaysian investors, in a bid to strengthen its hold on its key market in South East Asia.
OpenLearning team
Adam Brimo (centre) with co-founder David Collien (second from right) and the OpenLearning executive team. Source: Supplied.

Social-learning startup OpenLearning has raised $8.5 million in Series A funding, led by Malaysian investors, in a bid to strengthen its hold on its key market in South East Asia.

Launched in 2013, muru-D accelerator graduate OpenLearning now has more than 1.3 million users, 50% of whom are in Malaysia, and 40 staff in the country on top of its 30 in Australia.

This funding round follows $1.7 million in seed funding in February 2015, although co-founder Adam Brimo tells StartupSmart existing investors have been supporting the platform since then. To date, the startup has now raised a total of $13.7 million.

Brimo says online learning typically involves a series of quizzes, but โ€œthatโ€™s not how you learn a new skillโ€.

To this end, OpenLearning was designed to allow for social learning, through โ€œreflecting, sharing and discussing ideasโ€, with a broad goal of improving access to high-quality online learning for higher education.

Previously, despite OpenLearningโ€™s customer base in Malaysia, all of its investors had been Australia-based. The startup has had โ€œgreat support from themโ€, Brimo says, but the timing was right to โ€œbring on board some strategic investors in one of our key marketsโ€.

This latest funding is led by Prestariang Berhad, a technology training provider, and Paramount Corporation Berhad, an investment company focused on education and property development. Brimo says both have interests aligned with OpenLearning, and were already known to the business.

While the fundraising process took a little longer than planned, Brima accepts: โ€œThese things always doโ€.

โ€œOverall, Iโ€™m quite pleased with how everything went,โ€ he adds.

Brimo says Malaysia is such a prominent market for OpenLearning partly because itโ€™s โ€œone of the fastest-growing higher education hubs in the world, and an early adopter of education technologyโ€.

Equally, Brimo says, Malaysia was the first country in the world to launch a national massive open online courses (MOOC) program, using the OpenLearning platform, and has national targets for blended and online learning.

โ€œThe company and the platform is at the stage where itโ€™s growing quite quickly,โ€ Brimo says.

โ€œWe wanted to make sure we had some representation in South East Asia as a whole.

โ€œWe can see the idea and company is really resonating with a lot of people, so the timing was right,โ€ he adds.

On top of all the trends

Brimo says OpenLearning’s latest funding will be put towards development of the platform, and research into new products and technologies.

โ€œHigher education requires sustained investment to maintain innovation,โ€ he says.

โ€œWe canโ€™t stop developing โ€ฆ we have to be proactive and we have to keep investing in our platform.โ€

Although he says theyโ€™re not disclosing any of the specific products theyโ€™re working on yet, Brimoโ€™ hints that OpenLearning is โ€œon top of all the new trends,โ€ and is researching โ€œthings like artificial intelligence and how that can have an impact on educationโ€.

โ€œThe focus is on how these technologies can actually enhance the product, and help improve the learning,โ€ he says.

Initially, however, the plan is to โ€œreally solidify our position in our two key marketsโ€.

Brimo says this will involve expanding the platform and growing the sales and relationships teams to allow OpenLearning to work with even more universities and colleges.

In the future, Brimo has ambitions to expand to other South East Asian countries, but for now, the focus remains on Australia and Malaysia.

Brimo says OpenLearning has been growing 100% year-over-year, over the past few years. And he expects that to continue.

โ€œMy job as the founder is to keep it growing,โ€ he says.

โ€œIโ€™d always hoped it would keep growing. The numbers over the years do get larger and thatโ€™s quite exciting … but I donโ€™t place too much of an emphasis on it.

โ€œI donโ€™t think in terms of how big the numbers get. More about how [users] are experiencing the platform. Thatโ€™s what weโ€™re focusing on.โ€

The growth has been a โ€œlearning processโ€ for OpenLearning, he says, forcing the team to focus on getting people from different countries working together, and to think about the way the company is structured and organised.

โ€œIt didnโ€™t happen automatically,โ€ Brimo says. โ€œWe had to put a lot of work into it.โ€

For other startup founders embarking on a growth journey, Brimo stresses โ€œyou have to believe that what youโ€™re doing is making a difference to peopleโ€.

Persistence and dedication is key, he says. But he warns success is โ€œnot going to happen overnight”.

โ€œPeople only hear about companies when theyโ€™re successful,โ€ he adds.

โ€œThey donโ€™t realise the years they had to go through when they werenโ€™t.โ€

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